Ex Parte Helmfridsson et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardNov 27, 201211980540 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 27, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ________________ Ex parte BROR-INGE HELMFRIDSSON and KEN OLSSON ________________ Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 Technology Center 3700 ________________ Before JEFFREY N. FREDMAN, STEPHEN WALSH, and JOHN G. NEW Administrative Patent Judges. NEW, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 2 SUMMARY Appellants file this appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s Final Rejection of claims 1-20 as unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). Claims 1 and 3-20 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being obvious over Sherrod et al. (US 5,558,659, September 24, 1996) (“Sherrod”). The Examiner additionally rejected claim 2 as being obvious over the combination of Sherrod and Roslansky et al. (US 6,371,950 B1, April 16, 2002). We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants’ invention is directed to an incontinence protector for males intended for disposable use, including a fastening pocket for fastening the genitalia during use. Abstract. GROUPING OF CLAIMS Claims 2-20 depend from claim 1, and we therefore select independent claim 1 as representative of this group. Claim 1 recites: 1. An incontinence protector for males, comprising a front transverse edge facing forwards during use, a rear transverse edge facing rearwards during use, a length of the front transverse edge being greater than a length of the rear transverse edge, two longitudinal edges, an upper liquid- permeable casing layer, a lower backing layer, an absorption body disposed between the liquid-permeable casing layer and the backing layer, and a substantially non-absorbent material layer disposed on a side of the liquid-permeable casing layer which is oriented away from the absorption body, a periphery Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 3 of the material layer being connected to at least one of the liquid-permeable casing layer or the backing layer along the rear transverse edge and along or adjacent the two longitudinal edges, wherein the material layer has a front transverse edge, the front transverse edge being free, wherein a pocket is formed between the material layer and the liquid-permeable casing layer and wherein an opening of the pocket is disposed at the front transverse edge of the material layer. App. Br. App’x A-1. ISSUE Appellants argue that the Examiner erred in finding that claim 1 is unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being obvious over Sherrod. App. Br. 9. Specifically, Appellants argue that the Examiner erred because the Examiner finds that the front end 40 of Sherrod’s article 20 corresponds to the rear transverse edge of the claimed invention and that Sherrod’s back end 42 corresponds to the front transverse edge of the claimed invention. Furthermore, Appellants argue that the Examiner erred in finding that Sherrod’s opening 92 corresponds directly to the opening of the pocket (which attaches at its fixed end to the rear transverse edge) in the claimed invention. App. Br. 17. We are thus presented with the issue of whether the evidence of record supports the Examiner’s finding that the front end 40 of Sherrod’s article 80 corresponds to the rear transverse edge of the claimed invention and that the back end 42 corresponds to the front transverse edge of the claimed invention. ANALYSIS Appellants argue that the Final Rejection of claim 1 requires an interpretation of Sherrod’s article that is directly contrary to the express Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 4 disclosure of Sherrod and an interpretation of the claimed invention that is directly contrary to the claim language. App. Br. 10. According to Appellants, the “front” in both Sherrod and the claimed invention is the abdomen end and the “back” or “rear” in both Sherrod and the instant application is the crotch end, positioned behind the scrotum and adjacent to the perineum. App. Br. 10-11. Appellants dispute the Examiner’s conclusion that that it would have been obvious to modify Sherrod's article 80 so that the length of the crotch end (back end 42 in Sherrod, allegedly corresponding to the claimed invention’s “front transverse edge”) is greater than the length of the abdomen end (front end 40 in Sherrod, allegedly corresponding to the claimed “rear transverse edge”). App. Br. 11. According to Appellants, such a modification would have rendered the claimed invention unsuitable for its intended purpose by: (a) undesirably increasing the size of the claimed invention positioned between the legs of the wearer, thus sacrificing comfort of the wearer; and (b) widening the crotch end (back end 42) of the claimed invention would create a product that is subject to bunching and twisting during use, which Appellants allege is contrary to the teachings of Sherrod. App. Br 12. Appellants also contend that the Examiner erred in finding that Sherrod’s compartment 88 reads directly upon the pocket of the claimed invention and that Sherrod’s opening 92 corresponds to the claimed opening. App. Br. 17. According to Appellants, the front edge of Sherrod’s retaining member 82 is fixed at its first end 88 to the front end 40 of the absorbent article 80 and therefore, the “front” edge of the retaining member 82 is not free. Id. (citing Sherrod, col. 11, ll. 19-20). Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 5 The Examiner answers that Sherrod teaches that the dimensions of the article can vary depending on desirability (Ans. 8 (citing Sherrod, col. 5, ll. 43-47)), and therefore, it would have been obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made [to make] the length of the edge associated with the scrotum greater than the length of the edge associated with the penis to conform dimensions of the appropriate anatomical structures. Ans. 8. Furthermore, the Examiner finds that “how the article is to be w[o]rn is the matter of the intended use of the article and the wearer's preferences. Since the device can be used both for protection of genitalia and for enhancing the circulation in the gr[o]in area, it would have been obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made to wear the device of Sherrod either way depending on the intend of the wearer.” Id. We are not persuaded by the Examiner’s reasoning. The Examiner’s rejection of the claim relies upon equating the “front transverse edge facing forwards during use” recited in claim 1 with the back end 42 of Sherrod and equating claim 1’s “rear transverse edge facing rearwards” with the front edge 40 disclosed by Sherrod. Final Rejection 5. However, as Appellants point out, Sherrod explicitly teaches that: “The article 80 is positioned on a male torso 150 such that the front [end] 40 is toward the front of the wearer and the back end 42 is adjacent [to] the perineum.” Sherrod Fig. 7, col. 11, ll. 60-63; see also App. Br. 10. We therefore cannot accept the Examiner’s aberrant definition that the back end 42 disclosed by Sherrod corresponds to the “front transverse edge facing forwards during use” recited in claim 1. Rather, we find that the broadest reasonable interpretation of Sherrod and the language of claim 1 identifies the front end 40 of Sherrod as Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 6 corresponding to claim 1’s recited “front transverse edge facing forwards during use.” Similarly, we find that the back end 42 disclosed by Sherrod corresponds to the “rear transverse edge facing rearwards” recited in claim 1. See, e.g., In re Buszard, 504 F.3d 1364, 1366-67 (Fed. Cir. 2007). As Appellants indirectly admit, such an interpretation results in Sherrod reading directly upon the limitation of claim 1 reciting “the front transverse edge being greater than a length of the rear transverse edge” because Sherrod also teaches that “[r]egardless of the width of the moisture barrier 22 … the Resulting Width of the absorbent article 20 desirably narrows toward the back end 42.” Reply Br. 5 (citing Sherrod, col. 5, ll. 43- 46); see also Sherrod, col. 8, ll. 34-39 (“[I]t is desirable for the front elastic member 66 to provide a reduced amount of transverse gathering force as compared to the transverse gathering member 32, which is located along the back end 42. As a result, the article 20 has a Resulting Width that narrows toward the back end 42”). We therefore find that, contrary to the Examiner’s conclusion, it would not have been obvious to an artisan of ordinary skill in the contemporaneous art to make the length of the edge associated with the scrotum greater than the length of the edge associated with the abdomen, because Sherrod teaches away from such a conclusion. See, e.g., In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (A reference teaches away when “a person of ordinary skill, upon reading the reference, would be discouraged from following the path set out in the reference, or would be led in a direction divergent from the path that was taken by the applicant.”). We therefore find that Sherrod discloses or suggests the limitation of claim 1 reciting “a front transverse edge facing forwards during use, a rear Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 7 transverse edge facing rearwards during use, a length of the front transverse edge being greater than a length of the rear transverse edge.” That is not, however, the end of our analysis. Appellants argue that the Examiner finds that Sherrod’s compartment 86 corresponds to the opening claimed by the limitation of claim 1 reciting “wherein an opening of the pocket is disposed at the front transverse edge of the material layer.” Claim 1; see also App. Br. 17. Appellants argue that the front edge of the retaining member 82 disclosed in Sherrod is fixed at its first end 88 to the front end 40 of the absorbent article 80. Sherrod col. 11, ll. 19-20; see also App. Br. 17. Consequently, Appellants contend, the “front” edge of the retaining member 82 is not free; rather, any free transverse edge of the retaining member 82 in Sherrod is the second end 90 of the retaining member 82. App. Br. 17 (citing Sherrod, Fig. 7). We are persuaded by Appellants’ reasoning. Fig. 7 of Sherrod clearly depicts that the pocket formed is affixed laterally to the front end 40 of the device and the free back-end 92 portion of the pocket flap faces the back end 42 of the device. See also Sherrod, col. 10, ll. 65-67, col. 11, ll. 9- 24. Appellants’ Figs. 1 and 2 depict the pocket as being affixed laterally at the rear transverse edge of the claimed invention with an “opening of the pocket is disposed at the front transverse edge of the material layer” as recited in claim 1. We therefore find that Sherrod does not disclose or suggest the limitation of claim 1 reciting “wherein an opening of the pocket is disposed at the front transverse edge of the material layer.” Claims 2-20 are all dependent upon claim 1. Because we reverse the Examiner’s finding of obviousness with respect to independent claim 1, we likewise reverse the Examiner’s Final Rejection of claims 2-20. Appeal 2011-006767 Application 11/980,540 8 DECISION We reverse the rejection of claims 1 and 3-20 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being obvious over Sherrod. We reverse the rejection of claim 2 as being obvious over the combination of Sherrod and Roslansky. REVERSED alw Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation